Tilman Baumgaertel on Sun, 31 Aug 1997 17:37:35 +0200 (MET DST) |
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<nettime> Interview with jodi |
The following interview with Dirk Paesmans und Joan Heemskerk, the two artists behind the notorious Jodi-site (www.jodi.org), was conducted at the Hacking in Progress gathering in the Netherlands three weeks ago. We had our brains fried at 30 degrees in the sun, yet managed to come up with a interview that I find very interesting. In this interview I put a special emphasis on the presentation of their work on the documenta (www.documenta.de), because I think that the institutionalization, representation and curating of net- based art is going to be an important topic in the future. For those who haven't been to the documenta in Kassel: the net art pieces are shown in an office-like space hidden behind a cafeteria, that has only one entrance. The decoration of the work is not by a designer, as Jodi claim in this interview, but by the artists Franz West (an uncomfortable bed and chairs) and Heimo Zobernig (who painted the walls blue as an subtle hint to IBM as one of the major sponsors of the show - very "contextual", huh?). The computers that show net art are not connected to the internet, with three exceptions: the projects of Muntadas, Pocock etc. and Blank/Jeron. Yet even with these works there are no direct links to other sites, and you can't surf to other URL's. Apparently the organizers wanted to avoid that the net art rooms turns into a cybercafe, where people read their email. While this is legitimate, the way it is now the data could come right from the hard disk. This problem will continue to bug future net art curators. I nevertheless think that depite the problems with the presentation the documenta nevertheless served as the one art event that put net art on the map for the art world. Tilman --------------------------SCHNIPP!----------------------- "We love your computer" Interview with Jodi ?: How did you get started doing art on the internet? Dirk Paesmans: We started about three years ago, when we lived in San Jose, California, which is the capital of Silicon Valley, the undefined area below San Francisco. Netscape is based there, and all these other computer companies like Adobe, Macromind and Apple. We were there as artists at resicence in the university. At that point the web wasn't really established. We worked in the art and computer lab of the university in Joel Slyton's class, and did some things with Hypercard and Macromind. Then we discovered the possibilities of the Net and of the Mosaic browser. There was a site that was very popular, the "Internet Underground Music Archive" (IUMA.com), where you could download samples from local college rock band. We visited them in Santa Cruz, and they gave us space on their server to experiment with. That was our technical introduction to working on the internet. To do something on a singular computer is easy, but in the beginning it was very difficult to put things on the net. We didn't have a great networking experience. We were not involved with BBSes or FTP or email or other protocols before the Web. Although we have always been hanging out with people doing that. = ?: So you had to go to California to get into this? Paesmans: Maybe. It's fascinating to just stand on the parking lot of Apple, and see the building and look at the cars. Or when you are in the university computer lab, all the students there want to work with George Lucas. The area was called "the fruit valley". It was a very green area that changed into a digital/computer/software landscape. That's also the joke Apple started with: They replaced the apricot and apple farming there with the device "Apple", and now the whole valley growns computertechnology. = ?: I remember that one of you made a remark about the difference between the European and the American internet. This seems strange, because the internet is supposed to be an international network, that surpasses national boundaries. What do you mean with this, and how does this difference affect you as artists? Paesmans: The Americans don't have to pay for their connection time... ?: ...because local calls are free in the US... Paesmans: ...so the internet is just an extension of their local computer. = Heemskerk: It suits their geographical sense as well, because some places are so remote, that they need a means of communication. Not only the internet, but also the telephone. If you pick up the phone in the Netherlands and call somebody in Germany it seems really far. But in the US they spend hours on their phones with their neighbors. Paesmans: And it's the same with the internet: home office workers for example can stay online for hours, because they don't have to think about the telephone costs. ?: And how does that affect you as artists? Paesmans: We cannot explore the net the way we want to. For example we cannot check the dutch newspapers in the morning on the net, because connection time is too expensive. You can look at your email, but you cannot look around for an hour, because you have to pay the expensive morning rates for a local telephone call. Heemskerk: The result is a whole different way of viewing. If you have to pay for the hour you want to see something immediately. You are not prepared to look for something for an hour. But you have to do this on the internet. Paesmans: Otherwise you just log into the little areas you know. It doesn't become this jungle where you go to discover things you did not know before. But this is just the interesting part of it. It is fun to find things from the Phillipines or Marrocco. So you have to get organized and do your surfing at night, because the rates are cheaper then. ?: How many hours do you spend online per day? Paesmans: Not many. Maybe half an hour. If we are working on something it might be longer. I like to look around at Japanese sites, which are incomprehensible to me. The characters are totally unreadable, and they have beautiful screen designs. ?: Was doing art on the internet a way to get around the art system, the galleries, museums, curators etc? Heemskerk: I don't think you really avoid the art world by doing things on the internet. It was more that we were already working with computers. And I found that the best way to view works that were made with a computer was to keep it in a computer. And the internet is a very good system to spread this kind of work... Paesmans: The computer is not only a tool to create art, but also the medium to show it within the network. And since the network doesn't have any labels, maybe what little Stevie is doing is art. It's the same with our work: There is also no "art"-label on it. In the medium, in which it is perceived, people don't care about this label. But if we show our work in a gallery space, the label "art" is on what we do. And we have to find "art ways" to show our work. ?: How do you feel about the way our material is shown at the documenta? Paesmans: In Kassel, the interface for showing net art is the office. This metaphor is too much of an cliche. It's meant to be some kind of joke, but it is not funny. It is vulgar, it's too easy. It doesn't work. And now it will be repeated over and over again. They did the same thing with video in the beginning. When video came out of a critique of television, there were experiments with video art on local American TV stations. Early Nam June Paik tapes were produced by american cable stations. When museums or galleries showed it, they set up little living rooms where you could watch those tapes. They thought: "It's TV, we can't present it just with the U-Matic player next to the television set, we need a home decor." ?: So what is the alternative to the way net art is presented at documenta? Just leave it on the net? Paesmans: I personally think that if you have a space and decide to show net works, you can also present it to people who are not used to computers. And you could also give the artists the opportunity to add things to their installation. I think it is very important for net artists to deal with the presentation, or they will be re-presented by other people; for example, designers who are asked to design to exhibition space. That's the worst. One should avoid that at all costs. All the different works disappear in the set up by the one guy who deals with the real space. The real space is of course much more powerful than all these networks. When you are viewing the work you are in the real space. If you only do your work on the net, you become a fragment of the local situation and you can easily become manipulated in any direction. ?: Where you approached by the documenta people at all about the presentation of your work in the show? Heemskerk: No. At first we heard that the net art works would be upstairs in the documenta Halle (the exhibition space "documenta hall"). They changed this plan one and a half weeks before the opening. Now the room with the net art is downstairs behind a cafe, and they asked some designers to make blue walls and strange furniture. There was never any contact with the artists about this. Paesmans: Other artists also didn't like the way the internet room is cornered, next to the cafe, next to the bookshop, next to the lecture hall. This way you have one gigantic recreation area, basically. When you enter this cave, you really have to be curious about net art. The room is not inviting, it looks like an IBM show room. We talked to many people standing in the entrance. When they saw the set-up, they said: That's not for us, that's some computer world. Heemskerk: In reality we don't work in a office. A lot of people have their computers next to their beds. The idea that computers are only in offices is from twenty years ago. Now it is fairly common that computers are on the dinner table or here on the camping grounds. An office space creates a distance. I don't like to enter an office. ?: I understand that you had to take links out of your work for the presentation at the documenta. Which links were those? Paesmans: Recently we made this map of the internet, where we took a diagram with all the big back-bones and the names of the major providers. We replaced the names of technical providers with alternative and art sites on the net, with links to these sites. We put this piece on the site of the documenta. Every time somebody at the documenta Halle comes to this map and tries to click on one of these links, the computer will crash. ?: Do you think that this presentation damaged your work? Paesmans: No. We left this link page in the work, even though it would have been wiser to take it page out. But we didn't make a concession to the documenta, which feels good. You cannot look at our work very well, but that's not only the case with our piece. If you want to see the works well, you have to look at them on the net. In a way it is only a symbolic representation in Kassel. ?: But if there is only one page with links to other sites on your work, in what sense is it net specific? Couldn't it also be on a CD-Rom? Heemskerk: The internet is the enviroment where it has to be shown. We work with the speed of transmission on the internet, or rather the slowness of transmission. That would get lost, if it was on a CD-Rom. None of the pages of our site has more than 30 kilobytes to make it accessible. Yet we think: The slower, the better. We also change our site a lot. CD-Rom is a static medium. We probably did 150 changes of our site since we set it up. ?: What kind of changes? Heemskerk: We replace things, and we add new projects. Or just update old projects. ?: Do you also have to keep it up to date when new browsers come out? Heemskerk: Not that much. We once had a problem when Netscape 3.0 came out. We used these background layers that kept flipping back and forth under Netscape 2.0, and that didn't work with the new browser. ?: Aren't you afraid that your work will disappear at one point because of technological paradigm changes? For example, that it can't be viewed anymore because browsers change overnight? Paesmans: Fear is not a good condition for work. We have no fear. We make these things because we are angry. People perceive this anger when they are on the other end, at the recieving computer... ?: Why are you angry? Paesmans: Because of the seriousness of technology, for example. It is obvious that our work fights against high tech. We also battle with the computer on a graphical level. The computer presents itself as a desktop, with a trash can on the right and pull down menues and all the system icons. We explore the computer from inside, and mirror this on the net. When a viewer looks at our work, we are inside his computer. There is this hacker slogan: "We love your computer." We also get inside people's computers. And we are honored to be in somebody's computer. You are very close to a person when you are on his desktop. I think the computer is a device to get into someone's mind. We replace this mythological notion of a virtual society on the net or whatever with our own work. We put our own personality there. ?: There is this rumor that your site causes people's browsers to crash. Is this true? Heemskerk: No. That is not a challenge. You could shut down anybody's computer with one line of code. That's not interesting. ?: My impression is that a lot of people look at your site briefly, and then go somewhere else, without ever exploring the details of it: "Oh, there is this site that looks like your computer is broken", and then it's back to CNN or Yahoo or whatever. Does that bother you? Paesmans: No. Media art is always on the surface. You have to get people very quickly. You need to give them a karate punch in the neck as soon as possible. And then - of course - they don't get to the details, and the site will just sit there for the next five years or ten years, or maybe 100 years. And maybe their children will have the time to explore the details... (laughs) ?: Do you trace how people move through your site? Paesmans: We once had a counter installed, but we lost track of it. We were checking it every day, and it became this obsession, which was ridiculous: "Oh, only 50 people today." And than we checked again an hour later: "Oh, now it's 65 people!" We don't have the counter installed anymore. Most net artists log everything that happens on their sites though. Not that they make use of it, but the artist's ego wants to know how the public looks at their works. ?: That's one of the specific properties of the internet: that the public can react to net art works in a very easy fashion. Do you get any reactions from your audience? And what are they like? Paesmans: We get a lot of email. In the first couple of weeks after we put up the site we got a lot of complaints. People were seriously thinking that we made mistakes. So they wanted to teach us. They sent us emails saying: You have to put this tag in front of this code. Or: I am sorry to tell you that you forgot this or that command on your page. For example the first page is unformated ASCII. We discovered by accident that it looked very good. But we still get complaints from people about this. ?: But are you only getting complaints? Heemskerk: No, a lot of people from universities send us emails like: "Hey, cool, man" ... Paesmans: Also, people sometimes send us helpful code. For example, somebody send us a java applet that we actually used for our site. We are really grateful for that. Some people really encourage us, too. They say: "Go, Jodi, go. Make more chaos. Make my computer crash more often." ?: When one looks at your site, there is no hint who is behind this: Is it a company? Is it an organisation? Is it a gang? Is this a comment on the possible anonymity of the internet? Paesmans: We decided to put the work immediately on the screen, without our press releases and without our bio. We don't use our site to present information. We present screens and things that are happening in these screens. We avoid explanations. Look at any exhibition: People are sniffing on the information plates next to the art works, before they look at the work itself. They want to know who did a piece, before they have an opinion about it. As long as we can we try to avoid that. ?: Is there any hint to your identity at all? Paesmans: No, just our email adress. Heemskerk: It doesn't serve a company or a brand, so we don't need to put up any information. Paesmans: It makes the work stronger that people don't know who's behind it. Many people try to dissect our site, and look into the code. Because of the anonymity of our site they can't judge us according to our national culture or anything like this. In fact, Jodi is not part of a culture in a national, geographical sense. I know it sounds romantic, but there *is* a cyberspace citzenship. More and more URL's contain a country code. If there is ".de" for Germany in an adress, you place the site in this national context. We don't like this. Our work comes from inside the computer, not from a country. ?: Does each of you have a specific task in your collaboration? Paesmans: Sometimes we sit together in front of our computer, and fight for the mouse. But Joan works on applets and code. For example, to customize a certain piece of code that we found on the net. Joan is the code breaker. ?: And you? Paesmans: Well, I just hang around and serve coffee, and wait until Joan comes up with a solution (laughs). Heemskerk: I think it's a total mixture. It's not that I do only the technical stuff and Dirk does only the graphics. We are both working on the site. ?: You have no art to sell at this point, only dematerialized objects on some server computer. What is your "business model" as artists? Paesmans: You know that there are the festivals, which always pay a fee. We haven't been thinking about this too much, but there is always the so-called "service fee" that you can ask for as an artist, if you do a workshop or give a talk. ?: What do you get for the participation in the documenta? Paesmans: We get a fee for the expenses we have when we put our files on their server. In total we got 1200 Marks. It is a clear example of exploitation. Which artist would move his ass for this amount of money? But net art is a victim of its b-status. It is treated as group phenomenon, as a technically defined new art form. That is something that we have to leave behind as soon as possible, because that is the standard way to do these things: A group creates a hype. They call it mail art or video art, and it's doomed to die after five years. I think we are looking for a third way, because we are not typical artists and we also won't play the role of the net artists forever. ?: I understand that you worked on a new piece that deals with hands. Can you tell me about this project? Paesmans: That's a work for a show at the Postmasters Gallery in New York. Some twenty artists have been invited to come up with something for the Mac Classic. It is a very small, black&white computer. The owner of Postmasters sent one of these Mac Classic to the artists and they have to return it before the show opens with the art work in it. Heemskerk: Our contribution is based on the relationship between the mouse and the screen of the monitor, the coordinates of the way you move on the desktop. Paesmans: When you use a computer, your hand is on the mouse pad, and the pointer on the monitor is your representation. So if you continue thinking about it the mouse pad is a very important tool to access your computer. You could say that the mouse pad is half of the computer. Heemskerk: The coordinates of your screen decide what you do. But the desktop is also very personal. Everybody puts things differently on his desktop. Paesmans: And you can almost use your own computer blind, because you know where things are. It is like the door to your computer. The mouse pad is the point where you get projected into the computer. Heemskerk: We will continue to work in this direction, because the mouse is the only physical relation that you have with your computer. The rest is in close distance. Interview: Tilman Baumgaertel ------------------------SCHNAPP!-------------------------------------- %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% >>Tilman Baumgaertel, Hornstr. 3, 10963 Berlin, Germany Tel./Fax. 030-2170962, email: Tilman_Baumgaertel@CompuServe.Com<< %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% Date: Fri, 29 Aug 1997 05:37:09 -0400 From: Tilman Baumgaertel <Tilman_Baumgaertel@compuserve.com> Subject: Switch off the art To: Nettime-Adresse <nettime-l@Desk.nl> They are switching off the net art @ documenta... Yours, Tilman %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% >>Tilman Baumgaertel, Hornstr. 3, 10963 Berlin, Germany Tel./Fax. 030-2170962, email: Tilman_Baumgaertel@CompuServe.Com<< %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% ---------- Weitergeleitete Nachricht ---------- Von: S. =3D?iso-8859-1?Q?Lamuni=3DE8re?=3D, INTERNET:lamunieres@sgg.ch An: (unbekannt), INTERNET:info@documenta.de Datum: 28.08.1997 19:14 Betreff:documenta X www.documenta.de will be turned off september 28 1 month left to enjoy enjoy documenta X --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@icf.de and "info nettime" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@icf.de